News, 13 April 2000
Professor Ian Wilmut, famous for creating Dolly the first cloned sheep,
has added his voice to calls to allow so-called therapeutic cloning of
embryos. Arguing that the potential medical benefits to people are
vast, he said that the human embryo deserves respect, but only as a
potential person and rather than an actual person. [Daily Telegraph,
13th April]
The latest information received from the British Parliament states that
three more amendments have been tabled with respect to the Medical
Treatment (Prevention of Euthanasia) Bill, although the substance of
one of these has been converted into a new clause. Various new clauses
and amendments already tabled have also received additional
signatories. The Bill will have its report stage in the House of
Commons tomorrow (April 14th) starting at 9.30 am.
Cancer sufferer Jill Baker, aged 67, was alarmed to discover that
doctors at St Mary's Hospital, Portsmouth, UK, had written the phrase
"inappropriate for resuscitation" on her medical notes without her
permission during her treatment for septicaemia. Nine months later she
is still enjoying a good quality of life. A spokesperson for the Age
Concern charity observed that they learn of similar cases every month.
[Daily Telegraph & Metro, 13th April]
A man has been charged with second-degree murder in Missouri after
beating his wife with a log while she was pregnant because she refused
to get an abortion. The baby, born three months premature, died from
"placental abruption" and prematurity due to the injuries to the
mother. Jason Hawkins, aged 22, who had thought that his wife was
pregnant with another man's child, has also been charged with first and
second degree assault. [Joplin Globe, 12th April (from Pro-Life
Infonet)]
The latest figures from the Public Health Laboratory in Britain
indicate that, in the past year, cases of gonorrhoea have risen by
nearly 40% in girls aged 16 to 19, and by more than half among boys in
the same age range. Gonorrhoea is a sexually transmitted disease which
can leave a woman incapable of becoming pregnant. Furthermore, one in
ten teenagers are infected with a sexually transmitted disease. [BBC,
12th April & Daily Mail, 13th April]
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